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Colorado safety Shilo Sanders (21) heads to the end zone on a pick six against the CSU Rams in the first quarter during the Rocky Mountain Showdown at Folsom Field September 16, 2023. Colorado State Rams wide receiver Tory Horton (14) runs after Sanders. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Colorado safety Shilo Sanders (21) heads to the end zone on a pick six against the CSU Rams in the first quarter during the Rocky Mountain Showdown at Folsom Field September 16, 2023. Colorado State Rams wide receiver Tory Horton (14) runs after Sanders. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
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Getting your player ready...

Colorado’s double-overtime victory against Colorado State, which ended in the early hours of Sunday in most of the country, drew 9.3 million viewers to make it the most-watched late-night college football game ever on ESPN, the network said.

Coach Deion Sanders’ Colorado team did not kick off until after 10 p.m. Eastern and did not secure the victory until about 2:30 a.m.

Still, it was ESPN’s fifth most-watched regular-season game ever on the network for any time slot. That broadcast window for ESPN college football averaged about 1.7 million viewers last year, the network said.

No. 19 Colorado’s first two games under Sanders were carried by Fox, with both slotted into the network’s Big Noon game. The Buffaloes’ victories over TCU and Nebraska averaged about 8 million viewers for Fox.

Colorado faces No. 10 Oregon on Saturday in a game scheduled for 3:30 p.m. on ABC.

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